Reactome: A Curated Pathway Database
THIS SITE IS USED FOR CURATION AND TESTING
IT IS NOT STABLE, IS LINKED TO AN INCOMPLETE DATA SET, AND IS NOT MONITORED FOR PERFORMANCE. WE STRONGLY RECOMMEND THE USE OF OUR PUBLIC SITE

Query author contributions in Reactome

Reactome depends on collaboration between our curation team and outside experts to assemble and peer-review its pathway modules. The integration of ORCID within Reactome enables us to meet a key challenge with authoring, curating and reviewing biological information by incentivizing and crediting the external experts that contribute their expertise and time to the Reactome curation process. More information is available at ORCID and Reactome.

If you have an ORCID ID that is not listed on this page, please forward this information to us and we will update your Reactome pathway records.

Name Email address

Details on Person Human strand-specific mismatch repair occurs by a bidirectional mechanism similar to that of the bacterial reaction

Class:IdLiteratureReference:5358575
_displayNameHuman strand-specific mismatch repair occurs by a bidirectional mechanism similar to that of the bacterial reaction
_timestamp2014-03-30 04:42:17
author[Person:5358616] Fang, W H
[Person:5357521] Modrich, P
created[InstanceEdit:5358539] May, Bruce, 2014-03-30
journalJ. Biol. Chem.
pages11838-44
pubMedIdentifier8505312
titleHuman strand-specific mismatch repair occurs by a bidirectional mechanism similar to that of the bacterial reaction
volume268
year1993
(literatureReference)[BlackBoxEvent:5358599] EXO1 interacting with MSH2:MSH6 excises single strand DNA containing a mismatch [Homo sapiens]
[BlackBoxEvent:5358619] EXO1 interacting with MSH2:MSH3 excises DNA strand containing an insertion/deletion loop (IDL) [Homo sapiens]
[Pathway:9968295] Somatic hypermutation of immunoglobulin genes by error-prone mismatch repair (MMR) [Homo sapiens]
[BlackBoxEvent:9968308] EXO1 excises single strand DNA surrounding a U:G mismatch [Homo sapiens]
[OtherEntity:5358631] DNA containing single strand gap 150-1000 bp [nucleoplasm]
[Change default viewing format]
No pathways have been reviewed or authored by Human strand-specific mismatch repair occurs by a bidirectional mechanism similar to that of the bacterial reaction (5358575)